Oculus Rift Founder Palmer Luckey

Virtual Reality's Future Is in the Hands of This 21-Year-Old

You might have heard: Facebook is buying Oculus VR for $2 billion. Whether you like it or not, virtual reality will be a big part of the future of technology, and Facebook is making that possible.

About a month before the acquisition news broke, Oculus Rift inventor Palmer Luckey was just a regular 21-year-old founder of gaming's hottest hardware startup. Below, you'll find Palmer's entire talk from the 2014 D.I.C.E. Summit, a gaming conference, where he predicts what's ahead for Oculus and the rest of the virtual reality crowd.

It's hard to believe that Palmer, a college dropout, has done so much in two years. The Oculus Kickstarter campaign that started it all was launched in 2012, and it's clear from this talk that passion is what drives him.

In five years, virtual reality (replacing a real-world environment with a simulated one, in this case via goggles) will "go beyond the resolution of the human eye," he claims. Palmer also predicted the hardware will "move away from bulky goggles to be about the same size and weight of the glasses many of you are already wearing."

In the end, virtual-reality headsets will be affordable, stand-alone, and not defined by their hardware, if all goes according to Palmer's plan. That last bit — that call for great content for the Oculus platform — could be the most revealing of what Facebook could contribute to the world of virtual reality.

"There are obvious communication cases," said Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg of Oculus's Rift headset. "People have built models of real places [for the Rift], and it's like teleporting."

Some think that the virtual-reality headset darling sold out (including the Minecraft creator), while others think that the acquisition will fuel mainstream interest in the platform.

Regardless of opinion, wearing the Oculus Rift is — objectively — pretty damn cool, and we can't wait to see how the gaming headset will evolve in the coming years. Watch Palmer Luckey's talk on what lies ahead for virtual reality, and let us know what you think of this budding platform's potential.

It wasn’t. And while I can watch and listen to the inimitable Stephen Hawking for hours, I'll likely turn off any video that includes the sight and sounds of a person constantly regurgitating and swallowing his own stomach digestive juices.

So, putting aside your fallacious arguments, i.e., False Analogy and Irrelevance, and ignoring your lack of capitalization and misspellings (e.g., "Hawkins"): “if that’s all you can take away from this then your [sic] an idiot.”

Irrelevance: Where an argument that may support one conclusion is used to support another, or where the argument is misguided or oblique to the issue at hand.

48 weeks

if that's all you can take away from this then your an idiot. do you focus on Stephen Hawkins physical condition? or the fact that he has a genius intellect with brilliant insight? its obvious he was nervous.. and that alone will cause people to throw up from the pressure of the situation. lucky isn't a natural speaker and is rather new at all of fame that's come his way. it shows in his nervous way of pacing, talking, loosing place with his talking point. but that doesn't take away from his passion about Virtual Reality or the direction that he was trying to share with the audience.

48 weeks

I found it difficult to follow Palmer Luckey in his talk (YouTube), not because of the technical jargon but because of the live display of gastroesophageal reflux (GER). It's gross watching him walk, talk, regurgitate and then swallow stomach digestive juices every 30 seconds. I had to turn it off. I'll skip lunch. He's obviously an unfit 21 year old.

About the condition: Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a condition in which the stomach contents (food or liquid) leak backwards from the stomach into the esophagus (the tube from the mouth to the stomach). This action can irritate the esophagus, causing heartburn and other symptoms. GERD is a more serious, chronic––or long lasting––form of GER (Gastroesophageal reflux). GER that occurs more than twice a week for a few weeks could be GERD, which over time can lead to more serious health problems. People with suspected GERD should see a health care provider.

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